The Standard Journal

Georgia lawmakers vote along party lines on federal COVID-19 aid

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — As was the case with the entire U.S. House, Georgia’s congressio­nal delegation voted along party lines Wednesday, March 10, on President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package.

The Democrat-controlled House passed the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 by a vote of 220-211, with all but one Democrat supporting it and all of the Republican­s voting “no.” Georgia’s six Democrats voted in favor of the legislatio­n, and the eight Republican­s opposed it.

The plan includes $1,400 economic stimulus checks for Americans earning up to $75,000 a year and couples earning up to $150,000 annually, an extension of $300-per-week in unemployme­nt benefits, aid to state and local government­s, funds to help schools reopen safely and an expanded federal child tax credit.

It also provides new funding for small businesses through the Paycheck Protection Program and additional funding to administer COVID-19 vaccines and expand testing and contact tracing.

“This bill is about saving lives and livelihood­s,” said Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, D-Suwanee.

“After a year of grief and pain in America, a year that caused economic hardship for hardworkin­g families across America … this bill helps us move past this year of pain and struggle,” added Rep. Lucy McBath, R-Roswell.

But Georgia’s congressio­nal Republican­s called the legislatio­n a hugely expensive overreach by Democrats that goes far beyond what is needed to address the public health and economic impacts of the pandemic.

“You can’t call it a COVID-19 relief bill when 91% of the $1.9 trillion goes toward unrelated Democrat priorities,” said Rep. Rick Allen, R-Augusta.

“It’s nothing but a liberal wish list parading as pandemic relief,” added Rep. Drew Ferguson, R-West Point. “This package is wrong for America, and it’s wrong for the state of Georgia.”

Georgia House Speaker David Ralston objected to a provision in the measure that prohibits state and local government­s from using any of the relief funds to offset tax cuts. Legislatio­n the state House of Representa­tives passed last week (week of Feb. 28) and sent to the Georgia Senate would reduce taxes by $140 million a year by raising the standard deduction for state income taxpayers.

“In Georgia, we have prioritize­d providing tax relief to our citizens, and [the American Rescue Plan] appears to prohibit that relief,” Ralston wrote in a letter to Biden dated March 10. “I pray that you will prevail upon Congress to have this flaw in the legislatio­n corrected before signing it into law.”

Of the $350 billion the bill earmarks for state and local government­s, $8.1 billion is headed to Georgia. Of that, $4.6 billion will go to the state, with the rest earmarked for local government­s.

Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., who voted for the legislatio­n when the Senate passed it last weekend, said the relief will go to those who need it most.

“Zero percent of the tax credits and stimulus checks go to the top 1%,” he said. “This is getting help directly to working class and middle class people.”

 ??  ?? Lucy McBath
Lucy McBath
 ??  ?? Jon Ossoff
Jon Ossoff

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